experience, healthcare, learning

Beginning: Let New Experiences Be New

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“You can’t use a Western mind to understand Eastern philosophy. To really understand it, you have to change your mind.” ~ Dr. Nan Lu, OMD

Dr. Lu used this quote to close his talk about Traditional Chinese Medicine at the Integrative Healthcare Symposium earlier this month. It reminded me of how often we try to understand a new concept based upon our past learning. Of course, this is entirely logical. Our experience gives us a language and lens by which to process novel ideas. Though just because this pattern is logical, doesn’t mean it always serves. What’s perhaps more powerful, and yet more difficult to do as we get older, is to just take a learning as is without trying to compare it to what we already know.

This is how children learn. They’re little sponges. No prejudices, no judgements, no nagging voice in the back of their minds that is chattering away. They take a new lesson as just that – new and to be appreciated in its own right.

What if we could do that as new situations and experiences come into our lives? What if we could set aside that chattering, monkey mind, and just take in the new information for all the glory it has in its own right? If we could do that then I am confident that there isn’t a single challenge in all the challenges our world now faces that we wouldn’t be able to solve.

4 thoughts on “Beginning: Let New Experiences Be New”

  1. Christa – I am re-reading a book that you might like that kind of links to this topic: How Doctors Think by Jerome Groopman, M.D. It’s a well-written look at cognitive errors doctors make, how and why, and ways for patients and doctors to be aware of these tendencies to minimize their effect on care. Both times I’ve read it, it’s made me think about how to make improvements in my own approach to analysis and problem solving, medical or otherwise.

    Happy Wednesday!

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  2. Christa,

    The East tends to value direct, intuitive experiences.
    By contrast, the West tends to favor rationalism.

    Guatam Buddha left family and kingdom to find himself.
    He wanted to discover the inner state of being, to be sure.

    It was not based on cold, logical analysis, but it was a way of being instead of becoming. That’s why “the wisdom of the East” has become such a stereotype in the West today.

    The West celebrates Bill Gates, while the East reveres its holy men, who give things up in the pursuit of mysticism.

    Thanks for sharing a wonderful post. Cheers to your life.

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    1. Hi Archan,
      It amazes me how different cultures shape a person’s thoughts and actions. Despite all we have in common, I’m always intrigued by what makes us different and all that we can learn from those differences.

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